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Starter on mwb: Write a suitable directional hypothesis for this investigation (3 marks). Two psychologists investigated the relationship between age and.

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Presentation on theme: "Starter on mwb: Write a suitable directional hypothesis for this investigation (3 marks). Two psychologists investigated the relationship between age and."— Presentation transcript:

1 Starter on mwb: Write a suitable directional hypothesis for this investigation (3 marks). Two psychologists investigated the relationship between age and recall of medical advice. Previous research had shown that recall of medical advice tended to be poorer in older patients. The study was conducted at a doctor’s surgery and involved a sample of 30 patients aged between 18 and 78 years. They all saw the same doctor, who made notes of the advice that she gave during the consultation. One of the psychologists interviewed each of the patients individually, immediately after they had seen the doctor. The psychologist asked each patient a set of questions about what the doctor had said about their diagnosis and treatment. The patients’ responses were recorded and then typed out. Working independently the psychologists compared each typed account with the doctor’s written notes in order to rate the accuracy of the accounts on a scale of 1 – 10. A high rating indicated that the patient’s recall was very accurate and a low rating indicated that the patient’s recall was very inaccurate.

2 Swap mwb with partner A suitable directional hypothesis would be ‘There is a negative correlation (relationship) between age and recall accuracy rating’. 3 marks for a fully operationalised hypothesis as above 2 marks for a directional correlational hypothesis that identifies age and recall as the two variables but is not fully operationalised 1 mark for a directional hypothesis where the variables are not identified (‘there will be a negative correlation’) or where the hypothesis lacks clarity. Award zero marks for a non- directional or null hypothesis or any hypothesis predicting a difference or association.

3 Starter on mwb: Write an operationalised non-directional hypothesis for this study. (2 marks) Some studies have suggested that there may be a relationship between intelligence and happiness. To investigate this claim, a psychologist used a standardised test to measure intelligence in a sample of 30 children aged 11 years, who were chosen from a local secondary school. He also asked the children to complete a self-report questionnaire designed to measure happiness. The score from the intelligence test was correlated with the score from the happiness questionnaire. The psychologist used a Spearman’s rho test to analyse the data. He found that the correlation between intelligence and happiness at age 11 was +0.42.

4 Swap mwb with partner Award 2 marks for an appropriate non-directional hypothesis which is operationalised. ‘There is a relationship between happiness scores on a questionnaire and intelligence test scores’. Award 1 mark for a non-directional hypothesis which is not fully operationalised or lacks clarity (‘there is a relationship between happiness and intelligence’). Award no marks for a null or directional hypothesis, or one that predicts a difference/link/association/connection.

5 Individually. Read the case study and bullet point the answer… The psychologist asked the 60 patients for fully informed consent to take part in this trial. What should the psychologist have told the patients so that they were able to give their consent? [5 marks]

6 Exam mark scheme. In order to gain fully informed consent for this trial, patients should be informed of key information provided in the stem about the clinical trial. They will be allocated to one of the conditions and they may not receive therapy If they do receive therapy it will be Cognitive Behavioural The time period for the study (ie up to 12 weeks) In addition, students could refer to other relevant ethical information such as: Data should be anonymised so they are not identifiable in the results Patients should be made aware that they are free to withdraw themselves or their data from the clinical trial if need be They may be asked to complete homework assignments outside the therapy sessions. For five marks, students must cover the top three bullet points. Answers focus only on generic ethical issues (freedom to withdraw, confidentiality) can gain a maximum of two marks.

7 Conducting the experiment

8 Exam question: 15 minutes to answer Research has shown that music can affect the ability to concentrate. Design an experiment that could be carried out in a classroom to test the effects of two different kinds of music on a task requiring concentration. You must use a repeated measures design. In your answer you should: fully operationalise the independent and dependent variables provide details of how you would control extraneous variables describe the procedure that you would use. You should provide sufficient detail for the study to be carried out. (10 marks)

9 Some of the most common errors were as follows: – Ignoring the requirement to use repeated measures and converting the experiment to an independent groups design – Failing to counterbalance order of presentation of the two types of music – Producing two concentration tests which were not matched for difficulty – Testing music v no music – Focusing on trivial controls (breakfast, temperature) and ignoring important ones (volume of music).

10 Individually answer the below question… Sampling techniques (10 minutes) 1.Define sampling? 2.What is a target population? 3.If a sample is representative, what does this really mean? 4.What does sampling error mean? 5.What is sample bias? 6.Why are larger samples generally more representative?

11 Sampling techniques (10 minutes) Sampling methodDefine/ How would you do it? StrengthLimitation Opportunity sample Random sample Volunteer sample

12 Decide which of the 3 sampling techniques is being used in the examples. Students investigating the link between age and attitudes to the legalisation of drugs stop people in the street and ask them their views. A university lecturer request participants for an experiment into how expectation affects perception by placing an advert on the common room notice board. A teacher selects a sample of year 9 students to take part in a test of selective attention by picking every third student from the register.


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